About: The Conqueror Worm   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The poem's title refers to the idea that buried corpses are eaten by worms. Although the connection between worms and death dates back many centuries, Poe may have been influenced by the poem "The Proud Ladye" by Spencer Wallis Cone, which was published in an 1840 edition of Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, in which the phrase "the conqueror worm" appears. The theatrical imagery in the poem may have been influenced by the fact that Poe's parents, Eliza Poe and David Poe, Jr., both of whom died before they reached the age of thirty, had both been actors.

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  • The Conqueror Worm
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  • The poem's title refers to the idea that buried corpses are eaten by worms. Although the connection between worms and death dates back many centuries, Poe may have been influenced by the poem "The Proud Ladye" by Spencer Wallis Cone, which was published in an 1840 edition of Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, in which the phrase "the conqueror worm" appears. The theatrical imagery in the poem may have been influenced by the fact that Poe's parents, Eliza Poe and David Poe, Jr., both of whom died before they reached the age of thirty, had both been actors.
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abstract
  • The poem's title refers to the idea that buried corpses are eaten by worms. Although the connection between worms and death dates back many centuries, Poe may have been influenced by the poem "The Proud Ladye" by Spencer Wallis Cone, which was published in an 1840 edition of Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, in which the phrase "the conqueror worm" appears. "The Conqueror Worm" describes angels watching a play in which the characters appear to have little control over their own destinies. A monster appears which eats each of the actors. The saddened and horrified angels leave the theater. It is revealed that the angels have been watching human lives and that the monster represents death. The theatrical imagery in the poem may have been influenced by the fact that Poe's parents, Eliza Poe and David Poe, Jr., both of whom died before they reached the age of thirty, had both been actors.
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